‘I’m being villainized’ — Trans community speaks against Board of Ed. resolution opposing LGBTQ+ protections

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‘I’m being villainized’ — Trans community speaks against Board of Ed. resolution opposing LGBTQ+ protections
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'It's very, very frustrating to constantly see politicians and people in power talk about things that they really just fundamentally do not understand,' said Aaron Demlow, a young trans man from Medina.

Conservative state board member Brendan Shea introduced the"Resolution to support parents, schools, and districts in rejecting harmful, coercive, and burdensome gender identity policies."

"I wouldn't wish that loneliness or isolation on anybody because I almost didn't make it through," he said. Shea and other Republican policymakers said the new guidelines go too far since the government could withhold federal funding from schools that don’t follow the updated law. "Assigned at birth" references gender identity and how the individual identifies. It can match the assigned sex at birth, or it could not.

"If we upend something as basic, and I think generally accepted as a scientific fact prior to 10 minutes ago, that a human male has an X and Y chromosome... If we upend that, then I don't think we have a leg to stand on in education in terms of upholding certain things as self-evident truths," he said.

To note, just because Shea wants to put forward this resolution doesn't mean he has the power for all of these requirements to go into place. He isn't a lawmaker, but a policy-maker, and has limited control over educators. He can, however, give encouragement to lawmakers to continue looking at these types of bills and can have the state superintendent tell school districts to not follow Title IX.

House Bill 454, introduced Click, would severely limit healthcare for transgender youth. In the 90-minute audio recording shared with News 5, constituent Cam Ogden, 22, spoke with Click, who is also a pastor in rural Sandusky County. She went to meet with him to urge him in early March 2022 to stop the bill but said what she learned in his office was much more concerning.

While losing custody does happen, it isn't just not affirming your child that makes that happen, legal experts said. Also, this claim that Canadian law allows this was debunked as a conservative right-wing conspiracy theory.

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